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[return to "A federal judge sides with Anthropic in lawsuit over training AI on books"]
1. 3PS+V1[view] [source] 2025-06-24 16:32:07
>>moose4+(OP)
Broadly summarizing.

This is OK and fair use: Training LLMs on copyrighted work, since it's transformative.

This is not OK and not fair use: pirating data, or creating a big repository of pirated data that isn't necessarily for AI training.

Overall seems like a pretty reasonable ruling?

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2. almata+K9[view] [source] 2025-06-24 17:14:35
>>3PS+V1
If a publisher adds a "no AI training" clause to their contracts, does this ruling render it invalid?
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3. jxdxbx+xs[view] [source] 2025-06-24 18:57:02
>>almata+K9
You don't need a license for most of what people do with traditional, physical copyrighted copies of works: read them, play a DVD at home, etc. Those things are outside the scope of copyright. But you do need a license to make copies, and ebooks generally come with licensing agreements, again because to read an ebook, you must first make a brand new copy of it. Anyway as a result physical books just don't have "licenses" to begin with and if they tried they'd be unenforceable, since you don't need to "agree" to any "terms" to read a book.
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